Fleeing Pakistan, Afghans rebuild from nothing

Afghan workers sit near the zero point at the Torkham International Border Crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan, in Nangarhar province, on April 20, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 22 April 2025
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Fleeing Pakistan, Afghans rebuild from nothing

  • Since April 1, more than 92,000 Afghans have been sent back to their country of origin, out of the some three million the UN says are living in Pakistan
  • Many had lived in Pakistan for decades after fleeing successive wars, crises in Afghanistan but did not wait to be arrested by Pakistani forces before leaving

Torkham: Pushed out of Pakistan where she was born, Nazmine Khan’s first experience of her country, Afghanistan, was in a sweltering tent at a border camp.

“We never thought we would return to Afghanistan,” said the 15-year-old girl, who has little idea of what will become of her or her family, only that she is likely to have fewer freedoms.

“When our parents told us we had to leave, we cried,” added Khan.




Afghan refugees with their belongings sit in a truck as they arrive from Pakistan at a makeshift camp near the Afghanistan-Pakistan Torkham border in Nangarhar province on April 20, 2025. (AFP)

Having nowhere to go in Afghanistan, she and six other family members shared a stifling tent in the Omari camp near the Torkham border point.

Islamabad, accusing Afghans of links to narcotics and “supporting terrorism,” announced a new campaign in March to expel hundreds of thousands of Afghans, with or without documents.

Many had lived in Pakistan for decades after fleeing successive wars and crises but did not wait to be arrested by Pakistani forces before leaving, seeing their removal as inevitable.

Since April 1, more than 92,000 Afghans have been sent back to their country of origin, according to Islamabad, out of the some three million the United Nations says are living in Pakistan.




Afghans walk through a fenced corridor after arriving from Pakistan near the zero point at the Torkham International Border Crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan, in Nangarhar province, on April 20, 2025. (AFP)

Khan’s family fled Afghanistan in the 1960s. Her four brothers and sister were also born in Pakistan.

“In a few days we’ll look for a place to rent” in the border province of Nangarhar where the family has roots, she told AFP, speaking in Pakistan’s commonly spoken tongue of Urdu, not knowing any Afghan languages.

In the family’s tent there is little more than a cloth to lie on and a few cushions, but no mattress or blanket. Flies buzz under the tarpaulin as countless children in ragged clothes come and go.

When it comes to her own future, Khan feels “completely lost,” she said.




Afghan workers sit near the zero point at the Torkham International Border Crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan, in Nangarhar province, on April 20, 2025. (AFP)

Having dropped out of school in Pakistan, the Taliban authorities’ ban on girls studying beyond primary school will hardly change the course of her life.

But from what little she heard about her country while living in eastern Pakistan’s Punjab, she knows that “here there are not the same freedoms.”

Since returning to power in 2021, the Taliban authorities have imposed restrictions on women characterised by the UN as “gender apartheid.”

Women have been banned from universities, parks, gyms and beauty salons and squeezed from many jobs.




Pakistani border security personnel (back) stand guard as Afghan boy workers run through the zero point at the Torkham International Border Crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan, in Nangarhar province, on April 20, 2025. (AFP)

“It is now a new life... for them, and they are starting this with very little utilities, belongings, cash, support,” said Ibrahim Humadi, program lead for non-governmental group Islamic Relief, which has set up about 200 tents for returnees in the Omari camp.

Some stay longer than the three days offered on arrival, not knowing where to go with their meager savings, he said.

“They also know that even in their area of return, the community will be welcoming them, will be supporting them... but they know also the community are already suffering from the situation in Afghanistan,” he added.

Around 85 percent of the Afghan population lives on less than one dollar a day, according to the United Nations Development Programme.

“We had never seen (Afghanistan) in our lives. We do not know if we can find work, so we are worried,” said Jalil Khan Mohamedin, 28, as he piled belongings — quilts, bed frames and fans — into a truck that will take the 16 members of his family to the capital Kabul, though nothing awaits them there.

The Taliban authorities have said they are preparing towns specifically for returnees.

But at one site near Torkham, there is nothing more than cleared roads on a rocky plain.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) believes “greater clarity” is needed to ensure that the sites intended for returnees are “viable” in terms of basic infrastructure and services such as health and education.

It’s important that “returnees are making informed decisions and that their relocation to the townships is voluntary,” communications officer Avand Azeez Agha told AFP.

Looking dazed, Khan’s brother Dilawar still struggles to accept leaving Pakistan, where he was born 25 years ago.

His Pakistani wife did not want to follow him and asked for a divorce.

“When we crossed the border, we felt like going back, then after a day it felt fine,” said the former truck driver.

“We still don’t understand. We were only working.”


Punjab imposes curbs ahead of Basant kite festival’s return after 18-year hiatus

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Punjab imposes curbs ahead of Basant kite festival’s return after 18-year hiatus

  • Basant to be celebrated in Lahore from Feb. 6-8 for first time since 2007, officials say
  • Section 144 enforced to bar religious and political imagery on kites amid security concerns

ISLAMABAD: Punjab authorities have enforced Section 144 and imposed strict limits on kite materials and imagery ahead of the Basant kite-flying festival, which is set to return in Lahore next month for the first time since 2007 under tight safety and public-order conditions.

The move comes as the three-day Basant celebration — a traditional spring cultural festival marked by kite flying — is scheduled from Feb. 6 to 8 under the Punjab Kite Flying Act 2025, ending an 18-year hiatus after years of ban amid deadly accidents and safety concerns.

Basant, once a vibrant tradition signaling the arrival of spring with colorful kites and rooftop festivities, was outlawed in the mid-2000s after authorities linked metal-coated kite strings and celebratory gunfire to multiple deaths and injuries.

“A 30-day ban has been imposed under Section 144 on the manufacture, sale, purchase and use of kites bearing religious or political symbols or imagery,” the Punjab Home Department said in a statement.

“Kites displaying the image of any country’s flag or a political party’s flag will also be prohibited,” it added. “The manufacture, transportation, storage, sale and use of kites in violation of these restrictions have been declared punishable offenses.”

Section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure allows authorities to impose different kinds of restrictions to maintain public order and safety.

The statement highlighted “concerns that provocative elements could use religious or political symbols during Basant.”

It said that authorities have permitted only plain or multicolored kites during the event.

“The Punjab government has allowed Basant as a recreational festival under a ‘safe Basant’ framework,” the statement added. “No violations of the law will be permitted during Basant.”